Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Jackson and Ravens can’t sustain regular season success

- By David Ginsburg

BALTIMORE >> The Lamar Jackson who ran with abandon and threw 36 touchdown passes for the best team in the league failed to show up in the playoffs — again.

During his marvelous second season in the NFL, Jackson was an AllPro quarterbac­k who carried the Baltimore Ravens to the best record in the league. Jackson amassed the most yards rushing by a quarterbac­k in league history and was the catalyst of an offense that led the NFL in scoring.

He put up some gaudy numbers on Saturday night against Tennessee — running for 143 yards and amassing 365 yards through the air — but Jackson also threw two intercepti­ons, lost a fumble and failed twice on fourthand-1 carries, leading Baltimore to just one touchdown in a 28-12 upset loss.

And that is why the topseeded Ravens are done for the season, much sooner than expected. Baltimore’s 12-game winning streak, home-field advantage and status as the top seed in the AFC proved completely irrelevant.

“We just beat ourselves. I had a lot of mistakes on my behalf,” Jackson said. “Three turnovers. That shouldn’t happen.”

Coming off a three-week break and looking appropriat­ely rusty in doing so, an error-prone Jackson didn’t get the Ravens into the end zone until the fourth quarter. That’s exactly what happened a year ago, when Baltimore scored two late touchdowns in its playoff opener against the Los Angeles Chargers.

Jackson’s goal this season was to erase the memory of that game, which came after he guided Baltimore to a 6-1 finish. Jackson went 2 of 8 for 17 yards and an intercepti­on in the first half against the Chargers, and the Ravens fell behind 23-3 in a one-andout playoff performanc­e.

It was Super Bowl or bust this time around, and Baltimore sure looked capable of making that happen. Jackson and the Ravens were virtually unstoppabl­e over the final three months, slapping aside some of the best teams in the league with surprising ease. And then, this. Jackson is 19-3 as as starter during the regular season and 0 and 2 in the playoffs. Now he’s got to live with that for a year.

“I know how he’s going to respond,” coach John Harbaugh said. “He’s going to respond by being extremely motivated and determined to improve as a football player. The strides he made between last year and this year are pretty indicative of that.”

That’s what made this game so darn surprising.

The Ravens were 8 for 8 on fourth-and-1 situations this year. Jackson went 0 for 2 in this one, getting stuffed at the line of scrimmage on each occasion. Both times, the Titans went the other way for touchdowns.

“I hate losing. I really do,” Jackson said. “We’ve just go to try hard next time around and convert it.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States